Cardiomyopathy is independent of skeletal muscle disease in muscular dystrophy
- 8 May 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The FASEB Journal
- Vol. 16 (9), 1096-1098
- https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.01-0954fje
Abstract
Dystrophin and its associated proteins, the sarcoglycans, are normally expressed in heart and skeletal muscle. Mutations that alter the expression of these membrane-associated proteins lead to muscular dystrophy (MD) and cardiomyopathy in humans. Because of the timing and nature of the accompanying cardiomyopathy, it has been suggested that cardiomyopathy develops as a secondary consequence of skeletal muscle dysfunction in the muscular dystrophies. To determine whether skeletal muscle dystrophy contributes to the development of sarcoglycan-mediated cardiomyopathy, we used mice lacking gamma-sarcoglycan and inserted a transgene that "rescued" gamma-sarcoglycan expression only in skeletal muscle. Gamma-sarcoglycan was expressed in skeletal muscle under the control of the skeletal muscle-specific myosin light chain 1/3 promoter. Gamma-sarcoglycan-null mice expressing this transgene fully restore gamma-sarcoglycan expression. Furthermore, the transgene-rescued mice lack the focal necrosis and membrane permeability defects that are a hallmark of MD. Despite correction of the skeletal muscle disease, focal degeneration and membrane permeability abnormalities persisted in cardiac muscle, and notably persisted in the right ventricle. Therefore, heart and skeletal muscle defects are independent processes in sarcoglycan-mediated muscular dystrophies and, as such, therapy should target both skeletal and cardiac muscle correction to prevent sudden death due to cardiomyopathy in the muscular dystrophies.Keywords
Funding Information
- Muscular Dystrophy Association
- National Institutes of Health (HL61322)
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evaluation of heart involvement in gamma-sarcoglycanopathy (LGMD2C). A study of ten patientsNeuromuscular Disorders, 2000
- Animal models for muscular dystrophy: valuable tools for the development of therapiesHuman Molecular Genetics, 2000
- Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy: one gene with different phenotypes, one phenotype with different genesCurrent Opinion in Neurology, 2000
- Sarcoglycans in muscular dystrophyMicroscopy Research and Technique, 2000
- The heart in limb girdle muscular dystrophyHeart, 1998
- Dystrophies and heart diseaseCurrent Opinion in Cardiology, 1997
- Beyond dystrophinCurrent Opinion in Pediatrics, 1996
- Deficiency of Adhalin in a Patient with Muscular Dystrophy and CardiomyopathyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Deficiency of a Dystrophin-Associated Glycoprotein (Adhalin) in a Patient with Muscular Dystrophy and CardiomyopathyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Dystrophin: The protein product of the duchenne muscular dystrophy locusCell, 1987